Comment Nowhere to run to, Baby (Score 1) 31
How "bout those removable phone batteries?
How "bout those removable phone batteries?
Yeah, taxes are generally unavoidable for most people.
Hosting a blog on Substack is just a market choice among so many.
Apple and Google stores are a bit more grey; I'd allow it.
It's like those guys who find a Civil War chest with a hundred gold coins in it and call the FBI.
Clout is far too expensive.
This is the one where they investigate Office on Antitrust grounds and wind up settling for not bundling Edge.
I've seen it in reruns....
I said some kind words about Anthropic when they refused to do targeting foreign and domestic.
In retrospect that was myopic praise.
That explains a lot.
I'm told there's research to determine if time stops inside black holes.
Or perhaps it runs backward, relative to the universe you just left behind.
it would suggest that time and gravity are in fact linked - the more gravity, the slower time moves.
Yes. Already verified experimentally.
Keep going with that, and you start to wonder if at the outer edges of the universe,
There are conjectures that every universe (and there are many) is the interior of a black hole. And that physical properties (like time, for example) are discontinuous at the event horizon. Both looking in and from the inside, looking out.
where matter has spewed into it.
Time, for a traveler heading toward an event horizon, appear to slow down to observers sitting back a ways, watching. So, to the traveller, time in the universe left behind would accelerate. Their trip would seem normal, but the universe they see in their rear view mirror would die due to entropy/heat death and cease to exist as they crossed the horizon. The arrow of time would reduce to zero as they actually reached the horizon*. But once inside (if they survive) the observation would have to be considered relative to the flow of time inside. They might stop accelerating toward the hypothesized singularity at the center and begin decellerating as they travelled into the new universe. Consisting of a distributed but lumpy centerless mass with no singularity. Just as our universe is.
*Particles for whom there is no arrow of time in our universe are called photons. So, passing the event horizon probably involves a matter to energy conversion. Probably not survivable, IMO.
I resd a story about someone with Bitcoin keys on a laptop which they lost access to.
It was put on a shelf waiting for an exploit like this.
VeraCrypt is a particularly strong full-disk encryption, although you don't hear much of companies using it. However, BitLocker security issues keep getting mentioned and it looks like VeraCrypt fixed a number of theirs. However, code quality seems to be listed as unclear on some sites. Not sure how true that actually is though.
BestCrypt is another, but I'm not happy they permit fragile encryption schemes, as those could potentially be used by the software as standard for something important. Being commercial software, that wouldn't be easy to check.
BitLocker seems to be a typical Microsoft failure in terms of what it does, used only because it's Microsoft and that gives CTOs and CFOs someone to blame.
blacklist: esp4 esp6 rxrpc
If you already did it for dirtyfrag you're good.
These are purpose built single occupant DCs. It doesn't get any stickier than that. Google doesn't even visit their DCs when a server fails. They just power it off remotely and power up a warm spare.
We are taking action against TikTok and its addictive design
Would that the City of Seattle take the same position on fentanyl.
Well, before AI, data centers were just another customer of the local utility. So, the "exact same regulations, environmental and otherwise" was sort of a given. That starts to break down when the DCs build and operate their own power plants.
The whole "Aunt Millie in upstate New York buys her power from a New Mexico solar plant" is sort of bullshit. When she turns her lights on, that power comes from Indian Point.
Nah, this is more like working at a company that measures your productivity in LoC typed.
I worked for an outfit that considered this as a metric. At the staff meeting where this was brought up, I commented that this was unfair. I wrote mostly in C. And all my programs were one line long.
The computer is to the information industry roughly what the central power station is to the electrical industry. -- Peter Drucker